US GOV Munster High School Gordon Test 1

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93 Terms

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voting, following laws, keeping up with the news, volunteering

What activities are required of a citizen?

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requirements (following the law) (and) responsibilities (voting)

What is the difference between responsibilities of a citizen and requirements of a citizen?

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participation (and law following)

How do you define your role in society and polity?

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Alexis De Tocqueville

"the proper civic knowledge, skills, and dispositions" - we need to prepare people to be something bigger than themselves without losing themselves

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jus soli

citizenship from being born on US soil
14th Amendment- can't be changed easily

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jus sanguinis

citizen by parents or blood
8th Amendment- easier to change than jus soli

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naturalization

process of becoming a citizen

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expatriation

legal process where loss of citizenship occurs
Congress can't take away citizenship for something someone has done

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refugee

a person who has been forced to leave their country in order to escape war, persecution, or natural disaster

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alien

citizen of a foreign state who lives in this country

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enemy combatant

someone from another country who is not a war prisoner because they weren't wearing a uniform
acts of terror
in between zone

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government

institution through which society makes and enforces its public policies
an institute of state that maintains social order, provides public services, and enforces laws which are binding

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polity

a form or process of a civil government or constitution

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nation

ethnic term, referring to races of other large groups of people; people

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state

a body of people, living in a defined territory, organized politically and with power to make law without consent of authority; a country

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democracy (also a presidential system), constitutional republic, (and) federal

What type of government do we have? democracy
presidential system
constitutional republic
federal

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Pluralistic (but in reality, we are probably a little bit of each)

Is policy making in America best described as pluralistic, hyper-pluralistic, or classist/elitist?

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unitary

sovereignty is in central government
adv: central government creates local units of government for its own convenience
disadv: local governments only have the powers that central is willing to give them

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federal

When sovereignty is divided.
adv: national and state governments are coequal partners
disadv: conflicts arise and some functions/services are duplicated

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confederate

sovereignty is located at the regional level
adv: most power belongs to local governments
disadv: central government only has limited power, which restricts its ability to act on behalf of confederacy as a whole (limits defense and foreign affairs)

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presidential government

features separation of powers between executive and legislative branches of government
independent and coequal
president is chosen by people and has fixed term and significant powers that aren't directly controlled by legislature

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parliamentary government

executive branch is made up of prime minister or premier and their cabinet
more democratic
leader is chosen by parliament, and then choose people from parliament to be in the cabinet
leader and cabinet remain in office as long as majority of parliament agrees with them
"vote no confidence"

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absolute monarchy

there are no limits to what the one ruler can or can't do

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constitutional monarchy

one person dominates, but government is limited
a constitution bodies everything that limits

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authoritarianism

government controls all of the actions of its subjects

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oligarchy

government is ran by a small group of people

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totalitarianism

government controls thoughts

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aristocracy

government is made up of rich people

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theocracy

government controlled by religious leaders

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junta

example of oligarchy, military leaders
usually result of ku

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republic

choose policymakers to make decisions for the common good

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democracy

rule by the people

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plutocracy

government by many or all

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anarchy

no government at all- basically a state of nature

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traditional democratic theory

Robert Dahl
1) equality in voting
2) effective participation
3) enlightened understanding
4) citizen control of the agenda
5) inclusion

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small to big

What is the size and scope of American government?

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public policy

whatever government chooses to do or not to do; policymakers that the people elect

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political institutions

system of politics in government

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political ideology

a certain set of ethical ideals, principles, doctrines, myths or symbols of a social movement, institution, class or large group that explains how society should work, and offers some political and cultural blueprint for a certain social order

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political socialization

gaining opinions through family, friends, school, or tv

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political culture

a set of attitudes and practices held by a people that shapes their political behavior

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political efficacy

belief of influence on the government

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policy institutions

institutions that make public policy
I.E. Legislature

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linkage institutions

institutions that connect the people to the policymakers
campaigns, elections, media, political parties, interest groups

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political party

a group of voters organized to support certain public policies

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demakratia

"rule by the people"
Athenian

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written law

any law written in one spot

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Bill of Rights

first 10 amendments to the constitution

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common law

law that is apt to change is up to interpretation

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code of law

law based on tradition; set in stone

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bicameralism

legislature with two parts

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rule of law

the king needs to follow the same rules as everyone else

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limited government

government with limits

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state of nature

no government

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natural rights

life, liberty, and property/pursuit of happiness

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judicial review

justices have the power to deem a law constitutional or unconstitutional

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popular sovereignty

power rests with the people

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constitutional mechanism

takes one part of society and forces it up against another

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iron law of oligarchy

ultimately, oligarchies will form because the group with power will keep getting smaller and smaller

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federalism

mixed government

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platonic myths

stories told to help knowledge form
the boy who cried wolf

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mixed government

a constitution in which the form of government is a combination of democracy, aristocracy, and monarchy

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classical republicanism

an early theory of democracy that holds that the best kind of government is one that promotes the "common good" and the welfare of an entire society

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social contract

you give up something for something in return

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Aristotle

all forms of government are easily corrupted
take elements of each and put them together
mixed government
legislature, executive, and judicial

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Montesque

republics should be small and homogeneous

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Thomas Hobbes

people are lazy and corrupt

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John Locke

people are rational

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David Hume

people are emotional

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Magna Carta

attempt to limit the King

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explicit entrance

right of passage
LOCKE

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implicit entrance

born into it
HOBBES

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tacit entrance

overtime by accepting rewards and consequences
I.E. friends

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agency contract

you can leave
LOCKE

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alien contract

you can't leave
HOBBES

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natural rights contract

individual over society
LOCKE
HOBBES

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classical republican contract

society over individual

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arete

opposite of idiotis
excellence

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flexibility

constitution that founders wrote will work for generations to come

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legitimacy

being able to do something with validity

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solitary neglect

GB leaves us alone before written constitution was formed

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right

protection from government

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delegate

do what the people tell them to do

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populism

drive to return to the people

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acquitted

not guilty

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due process of law

protection against the arbitrary taking of life, liberty, and property

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natural law

law that isn't man made and that must be followed (physics, religion)

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(5 things to know about the) Declaration of Independence

1) declared independence
2) philosophical statement about legitimacy based on ideas of John Locke: natural rights, social contract theory, agency contract, and government by consent
3) natural rights- we have rights that aren't those of Englishmen
4) ends with alien contract, classical republican contract, declaration of war
5) tried to convince other colonists and peoples to join the fight for independence

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natural born

either being born on American soil or having parents who are citizens

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naturalized

individually naturalized- US Citizenship and Immigration Services in Dep of Homeland Security investigates and appeals to judge

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en masse

groups are naturalized when US requires new territory

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Liberalism

liberty and equality are the main values of?

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Conservatism

keeping tradition; and disliking change are the main values of?